Railway-ticket



(No Model.)

W. E. J. RILEY.

RAILWAY 'I IGKBT.

No. 303,322. Patented Aug. 12, 1884.

Nl PETERS. PhumLimognpher. washington. D. c,

UNrTnn STATES PATENT OFFICE.

NV. EDWARD J. RILEY, OF LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY.

RAI LWAYTICKET.

SPECIFICATION ormingrpart oi Letters Patent No. 303,322, dated August l2, 1884.

A pplioation filed April 20, i893.

To all whom t may concern:

Be it known that I, XV. EDWARD J. RILEY, a citizen ot' the United States, residing at Louisville, in the county of Jefferson` and State of Kentucky, have invented a certain new and useful Improvement in Railway- Tickets; and I do hereby declare that the fol` lowing. is a full, clear, and exact description of the construction thereof, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, forming part of this specification.

This my invention relates to a certain new and useful improvement in extension coupontickets for the use of railroads, so arranged a-s to require but oneform or class of ticket for the purpose of sending a passenger to any station on any one of several railroads leading out of a given point. rlhe object of this my invention is to provide a railway-extension coupon-ticket so arranged as to render it capable of being issued to any station on any one of several railroads running out of a given point, and, in order to illustrate the idea, I will take, for example, Chicago as the given point, and suppose there are seven lines of railroads running out of Chicago; and if any railroad in any part ofthe country is desirous of being able to send passengers to any point on any one of these seven railroads, it must keep on hand seven separate forms of ticketsl if any of. the coupontickets now in use are employed-one form for each of the seven railroads; and it is quite likely that the tickets of one, or perhaps two or three, of these forms may be called for but seldom, while the tickets of the remaining forms may be called for quite frequently. rIhese tickets, although they will all read the same way to Chicago, must all read differently from and out of Chicago, rendering them useless for any other terminal line except the one for which they are issued, but by the use of this my invention but one form of ticket is necessary to send a passenger to any station on any one of these seven railroads, instead of seven separate forms of tickets being required. rlhe issuing road needs but one form of ticket with seven extension-coupons attached, and if the tickets are not needed for one terminal line they will do for some other line whose extension-cou` (No model.)

pon is attached, thereby not only obviating the necessity of expending such large sums of money in printing so many different forms of long coupon-tickets, but also reducing greatly the labor of selling agents and the time and labor required by the auditing department, and much simplifying their work. Y

In the drawings, Figure l is a face view of the upper halfof my improved extension coupion-ticket, showing its general arrangement. Fig. 2 is a face view of the lower part ot' the ticket, showing the part containing notice to conductors and instruction to agents.

Similar letters refer to similar parts throughout the several views.`

Before proceeding further in describing my invention, in order to illustrate it more i'ully and set forth the additional, purpose i'or which it is especially adapted, I will take, for example, the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railroad, which has a great number of waystations. Now, by the use ot any other form of ticket than mine, it is either necessary to use a blank line in connection with a printed list of a few of these stations, and write on the blank line the name of any station desired as a point ol' destination other than those printed in the list, or to print the names ofthe stations desiredin a dividable list. In the iirst case the use of the blank line is decidedly objectionable to a number of railroads, because it necessitates considerable labor on the part of the selling agents, it being necessary to write `the destination in each and every coupon, beside being unsafe and liable to be changed. The other method makes the ticket excessively long and costly; but in my invention the stations are printed in dividable lists ou Y several extensioireonpons, the iirst of which, being nearest the contract, would contain the stations nearest Chicago, and thecoupon containing the names of the stations farthest from Chicago would be the first coupon nearest the agents stub; and if a person desired to fraudulently change the destination of the ticket by removing a coupon, it would only reduce t-he value of it. Opposite the statioirnames may also be printed -the number of miles distant from Chicago, if necessary.

In the drawings, A A represent the ticket,

IOO

which is printed in form as shown, and sepa- I road so that the extension-coupons of any one ratedat the lines indicated by :r x, in order to reduce the size to suit the paper upon which it is drawn. This ticket A consists of the agents stub F and series of extension-coupons E E, corresponding in number to the roads for which the ticket is intended to be used. The stub F and coupons E are all in one piece, and divided by perforated lines, so as to be easily folded and separated. The stub F and each coupon E show by suitable notices thereon the various roads over which the passenger buying the ticket has to pass. The point of departure is marked upon all by means of the agents stamp that sells the ticket.

C is the contract, which contains the usual Wording, as shown, and D is the notice to conductors.

B B are the ordinary coupons now in use.

The manner of using my hereindeseribed ticket is as follews: W'hen the agent at any one of the sellingstations of the issuing road is applied to by a passenger for a ticket to Albany, New York, for instance, the agent takes the ticket and doubles it over, face outward, at the perforated line between the two halves of the extension-coupons, on which he finds Albany, and punches it on either side ofthe name Albany,77 or otherwise marks or punches it, and then separates the ticket at the point at which he has doubled it over, stamps the ticket, and hands it to the passenger, retaining the agents stub and that part of the ticket attached to it, and returns the same to the auditor with the amount received for the ticket Written on the line provided i'or the same. In the same manner the agent would proceed to sell the ticket to any other point on any road having the extension-coupons with list of conpon-stations attached. Should the ticket be sold to any point on any or more roads would be left attached to the ticket, then such coupons not to be used would be rendered void by punching, marking, or erasing. The agents stub, being received at the auditing` department of the issuing` road, informs that department of the sale of the ticket, the point at which it was sold, the

4forni to which it belongs, the class of ticket,

its number, the amount received for it, the road over which it reads, the point of destination, and the road on which said point is situated; and each coupon, if so desired, may contain the names of the different roads over which the ticket reads, together with the points of departure and destination, the form number, the consecutive number, the classmarks, punchmarks, the naine of the issuing road, and the road over which the extensionlcoupon reads.

In ease the ticket should be used for only one terminal line, the manner of selling and using will vbe Vvery nearly the same as in the case just described, and the number of iorms and the expense to railroads would be inaterially reduced. The ticket may contain as many stations as desired, and may have one or more blank lines on which to Write the names of these stations.

What I claim as my invention, and desire 

